Dems seek unity as new, former chair take no questions from media after
party vote
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[August 01, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The vote for state Rep. Elizabeth “Lisa” Hernandez as the
Democratic Party of Illinois’ first Latino chairwoman was unanimous and
uneventful Saturday morning – the drama had occurred in the days prior
in a power struggle of some of the state’s most prominent Democrats.
Hernandez was backed Gov. JB Pritzker and House Speaker Emanuel “Chris”
Welch. She served with Welch on a special investigating committee of
House Speaker Michael Madigan in 2020, which chose to take no action
against the speaker for his alleged role in a yearslong bribery scheme
with a public utility. Several months later, Madigan was indicted.
The new DPI chair also played prominently in the redistricting process
last year in the General Assembly, chairing the House committee on
redistricting and frequently stonewalling inquiries as to what data was
used to draw new maps. Ultimately, Democrats passed the new maps on
partisan lines.
The 34 members of the Democratic State Central Committee – one man and
one woman for each of the state’s 17 congressional districts – elected
her by voice vote over outgoing chair Robin Kelly, who was backed by
U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin.
Kelly, a congresswoman from suburban Matteson, pulled herself from the
running less than 24 hours earlier after it became apparent Hernandez
had secured the requisite number of votes to replace her.
Kelly was elected chair just more than 16 months ago in what was also a
tight and contentious race between her and Pritzker’s chosen candidate,
Chicago Ald. Michelle Harris. She maintained strong support this year
among some members of the state central committee and drew high praise
from its downstate members.
Hernandez offered praise for Kelly in a statement, and the pair shared a
brief embrace before the meeting began. But the fact that neither Kelly
nor Hernandez took questions from the media underscored the fact that
the wounds of the fight might still be fresh.
“I have deep respect and admiration for Congresswoman Robin Kelly and
appreciate everything she has done to support Illinois Democrats. I've
spoken with Congresswoman Kelly and we are both ready to move forward in
a united fashion.” Hernandez said, reading aloud from a prepared written
statement before leaving without answering any questions from the media.
Kelly read from a prepared statement as well in running her final
meeting as DPI chair.
“When I was elected to this position last year, one of the first things
I did was get in my car and drive south for a listening tour,” she said.
“I heard a lot of things that first listening tour, but the thing that
stuck out the most to me was how many people came up to me and said
things to the effect that ‘I've never seen anyone from the state party
here before, let alone the chair.’ People were so excited just to feel
like their party saw them, heard them and cared enough to show up for
them.”
Kelly took over after former Speaker Madigan, who led the party from
1998 until February last year. Madigan frequently faced criticism for
the party’s lack of outreach and the fact that he mostly used the party
to elect state House Democrats. He stepped down after failing to gain
reelection as speaker in January 2021.
Some of the committeemen serving downstate congressional districts said
Friday once Kelly became chair, it was the first time they felt involved
in the party.
Peter Janko, a committeeman from McHenry County in the 11th
congressional district, said Kelly’s leadership was “like a brand new
day.” Terry Redman, of DeWitt County in the 15th congressional district,
had similar sentiments.
“Finally, downstate Illinois got some attention, and that's all because
of you,” he said in thanking Kelly for her effort as chair. “And I
certainly hope that continues.”
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State Rep. Lisa Hernandez, who was elected chair of
the Democratic Party of Illinois Saturday, is pictured with outgoing
chair Robin Kelly, a congresswoman from Matteson. The pair embraced
briefly before the meeting Saturday morning in which Hernandez was
elected unanimously after a contentious effort by Hernandez's
backers to replace Kelly in the days prior. (Capitol News Illinois
photo by Jerry Nowicki)
After the meeting, Redman said he spoke to Hernandez who told him she
was committed to paying continued attention to downstate.
“It's too big of an area to write off, let’s put it that way,” Redman
said. “So I think we'll do just fine under the new leadership.”
State Rep. Will Davis, a Hazel Crest Democrat and member of the Illinois
Legislative Black Caucus, said he didn’t like how the race played out on
racial lines, and how the governor worked so hard to sway support to
oust Kelly, the party’s first Black woman chair.
“Of course I’m still concerned about where it takes the party, and I
shared this with the new chair, that you know, there’s still some race
issues that need to be addressed and she’s going to have to work hard
and figure out how to mend those fences,” he said.
Pritzker’s camp maintained throughout the race that his opposition to
Kelly’s re-election centered on the fact that she was a federal
officeholder, which meant she wasn’t legally allowed to raise funds to
directly support state candidates.
“Look, what we're looking to accomplish, I think all of us who care
about the Democratic Party, is to make sure that we have representation
from all the diverse constituencies, and making sure that we have
leadership that can accomplish the goals that we want to set out to do,
which is to beat Republicans and make sure that the party is doing what
it needs to do,” Pritzker said at a news conference Friday morning.
Davis accused the governor of “twisting arms,” saying that while “money
and politics reared its ugly head,” Democrats now must work to unify to
support candidates in November.
It’s something Hernandez promised to do in her brief statement.
“I plan to sit down with every member of the State Central Committee,
our executive branch candidates, Democratic caucus leaders, committees
for the two Democratic Supreme Court candidates, members of DPI staff
and other stakeholders to ensure their vision for our party is
incorporated into the apparatus we will build to hold Republicans
accountable and win in November,” she said.
State Sen. Cristina Castro, a Democrat from Elgin and the committeewoman
who nominated Hernandez for chair at the party meeting Saturday,
compared the fight to a contentious primary election.
She and three other Latino central committee members pledged their
support for Hernandez on Friday afternoon which appeared to seal the
race for Hernandez at the time.
“We were hearing both candidates out,” she said. “We looked at the
vision for the party, and our colleague, Lisa Hernandez, had the vision
of the big tent for everyone. …So in the end, that's where we decided
and we didn't take your decision lightly.”
Pritzker congratulated Hernandez in a statement Saturday afternoon and
thanked Kelly for serving.
“Leader Hernandez is a woman of integrity who cares deeply about
fighting for working families, promoting diversity and inclusion, and
helping all Illinoisans prosper,” he said. “I know she will maintain our
party unity, and I am confident in her ability to work with the State
Central Committee to elect Democrats at every level of government ––
both in this midterm election and beyond.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |